Analysis: It's been entirely clear who the Bears are talking to but the finalists and a few other potential first interviews make this stage more murky.
The Chicago Bears are in the middle of their head coach search, which has cast a wide net of candidates that include rising coordinators, former head coaches and college coaches.
Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Todd Monken and Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator Joe Brady completed interviews with the Chicago Bears on Friday as Chicago looks for the next coach for former USC Trojans quarterback Caleb Williams.
Starting Monday, the Bears can meet in person with any candidate whose season is over, including Lions offensive coordinator Ben Johnson.
Led by Brady and star quarterback Josh Allen, Buffalo tallied 30.9 points per game, the second-highest mark in football. The latest name on the list of Bears interviewees: Todd Monken. Chicago ...
The Chicago Bears’ coaching search moves into Week 2 as Ben Johnson focuses on Detroit’s playoff run and Marcus Freeman’s name surfaces.
Stability can be gained by adding experience. Similar to 2015, the Bears’ search feels purposeful after the team failed with Eberflus, who lacked previous head coaching experience. In 2022, the Bears chose Eberflus over Dan Quinn and Jim Caldwell, their two other finalists, both of whom had been head coaches.
The New England Patriots have conducted their second interview for their vacant offensive coordinator position. According to a report by Ian Rapoport of NFL Network, the team met with current Los Angeles Chargers passing game coordinator Marcus Brady on Friday.
The Chicago Bears believe they have their star quarterback, and now they are searching for the right head coach. Matt Eberflus was fired after a 4-8 start to the season, but things didn't really get much better for Chicago,
The #Patriots have requested to interview #Chargers pass game coordinator Marcus Brady ... The news surrounding Brady came hours after New England was linked to Chicago Bears offensive coordinator ...
Two weeks ago, ESPN's Jeremy Fowler reported that McCarthy "could set his sights on Chicago." It was apparently mutual after the Bears requested an interview with McCarthy while he was still under contract by the Cowboys, who denied the request. After Dallas and McCarthy decided to part ways, it didn't take long for Chicago to set up an interview.